• Shock · Apr 2002

    A prospective study of inflammation markers in patients at risk of indirect acute lung injury.

    • Annika Takala, Irma Jousela, Olli Takkunen, Hannu Kautiainen, Sten-Erik Jansson, Arto Orpana, Sirkka-Liisa Karonen, and Heikki Repo.
    • Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Finland.
    • Shock. 2002 Apr 1; 17 (4): 252-7.

    AbstractSystemic inflammation triggered by insults like sepsis and acute pancreatitis may play a role in development of indirect acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Because little is known about the course of systemic inflammation on the days preceding diagnosis of ARDS, we prospectively monitored immune inflammatory status in 52 patients at risk and we assessed the presence of ALI and ARDS on day 7 after admission to the intensive care unit. On admission, serum interleukin (IL) 8, IL-6, and soluble IL-2 receptor concentrations were significantly higher in patients with subsequent ALI (n = 18) than in patients without ALI (n = 30). During a 4-day follow-up, IL-8 and IL-6 levels of ALI patients remained high and those of non-ALI patients decreased. None of the markers discriminated ARDS patients (n = 9) from non-ARDS ALI patients (n = 9). Among 11 patients with acute pancreatitis, ALI patients had significantly higher IL-8, IL-6, and phagocyte CD11b expression levels than did non-ALI patients, whereas among 14 patients with massive transfusion, respective findings in ALI and non-ALI patients were comparable. Results give credence to the view that systemic inflammation plays a role in development of ALI triggered by pancreatitis, but not in that by massive transfusion. This finding, if confirmed in studies with sufficient statistical power, suggests that the patients with massive transfusion do not necessarily benefit from novel biotherapies aimed at altering the course of systemic inflammation.

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